kyle mccarthy grew up in a hockey family.
he and his siblings laced up, and his father coached. but by the time he aged out of minor hockey in abbotsford, the game he loved had begun to hurt him.
“in the valley, locker room talk was dominated by homophobic comments, which were the norm,” mccarthy, now 32, recalls.
every shift, every drill, every save on the rink as a goalie carried a weight he couldn’t shake — a nagging reminder that his love of the sport and who he loved might never fit together.
“i knew i was gay by the time i was 12, but i also knew that if i wanted to keep playing hockey, i couldn’t be out of the closet,” mccarthy said.
leaving the sport in his late teens was heartbreaking, but he felt like he had no other choice.
it wasn’t until the summer of 2022 that mccarthy considered the possibility of returning to hockey. players with the cutting edges, vancouver’s lgbtq+ hockey association, marched past him in vancouver’s pride parade, donning their signature light blue jerseys with rainbow athletic tape. the league, the first of its kind in western canada, is home to more than 100 players ages 19 to 65.
“my husband saw the look in my eyes and said, ‘contact them,’” he recalled.
the cutting edges have seen a ‘massive surge’ in interest as a result of the popularity of the tv series heated rivalry.
jason payne
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now, mccarthy is president of the cutting edges and has been back playing hockey for several seasons.